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East Village Yacht Club

  1. NewsFeed
    East Village Yacht Club Dead in the WaterA couple of months after moving from its original East 1st Street location to Kelley & Peng’s former space on the Bowery, the East Village Yacht Club will raise its masts and sail away.
  2. NewsFeed
    Quhnia Is Packing Up Its Vodka DecantersFirst the East Village Yacht Club left East 1st Street. Now homey Eastern European–fusion spot Quhnia is jumping ship.
  3. Openings
    Arlo and Esme: Coffee by Day, Coffee Cocktails by NightThe former East Village Yacht Club space gets a new owner: a café-bar hybrid.
  4. Openings
    A First Look Inside the East Village Yacht ClubThe fact that it’s located across from the Bowery Poetry Club might just be the perfect microcosm of the Bowery in flux.
  5. NewsFeed
    East Village Yacht Club Prepares to Open
  6. NewsFeed
    East Village Yacht Club Finds New Place to DockA friend of Grub Street who was at the East Village Yacht Club last night gives us the following intel: “Apparently they are moving to a new space. Last night was their last open evening. They’re moving to a two-floor space on Bowery and Bond. They’ll open there in a week.” Perhaps he’s referring to the space on Bowery and Bleecker that used to house Mannahatta? An employee of the Bowery Poetry Club, which is leasing out its front café, says an owner of the East Village Yacht Club checked the space out but won’t be moving in. It took a hundred years, but the Bowery has officially gone from McGurk’s Suicide Hall to the East Village Yacht Club.
  7. The Other Critics
    Suba Called ‘Dazzling’; Shopsin’s Called…Shopsin’sSuba, Boqueria’s ambitious sister restaurant, gets two stars from Frank Bruni, who goes so far as to say “the best of the food here is distinctive and exciting. In a few instances it’s even dazzling.” Suba, underbuzzed and on a bad block, needed a big boost and got it. [NYT] Randall Lane isn’t impressed with the East Village Yacht Club, or for that matter Smith and Mills. Two stars out of six, and it sounds like they were lucky to get that. [TONY] Peter Meehan’s review of the new Shopsin’s begins with his best lede ever: “Tolstoy had it wrong about happy families, because there are none like the Shopsins.” The food, though beside the point, sounds about as good as before. [NYT] Related: A Taste of Kenny Shopsin